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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241003T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241003T183000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20240918T143421Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240930T144435Z
UID:8541-1727974800-1727980200@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:Alternative Medicine and Infernal Alternatives: On the Modern Fear of Being Duped
DESCRIPTION:Join us on October 3rd for a captivating lecture about of complexities of alternative medicine where belief and skepticism often clash. This discussion invites us to critically examines the implications of alternative therapeutic practices and explore the consequences of navigating a world filled with misinformation and inadequate knowledge. \n\nABOUT THE EVENT: \n\nWhen it comes to alternative medicine\, we are called upon to make clear decisions: Either you believe (in them)\, or you know (better). Either you adhere to evidence-based science or you let yourself be seduced by the mere placebo effects of quackery. This talk starts from the hypothesis that such alternatives must be taken for what they are: infernal\, in the sense that they are all too often unable to inform good practices. Going back to the debates around charlatanism in the USA around the end of the 19th century\, Solhdju will re-examine legal efforts to restrict therapeutic practices to those holding medical degrees\, focusing especially on testimony provided by the psychologist and philosopher\, William James. Following in James’ footsteps\, Katrin Solhdju will explore some of the contexts in which the “horror of being duped” is able\, not only to produce ignorance\, inaccurate knowledge\, or inadequate therapeutic practices but worse\, to generate a “thinning out” of reality itself. The question then is the following: What might the antidote to this multilayered modernist nightmare look like and what might it be made of? \n  \n\n\nABOUT THE SPEAKER: \n\n\nKatrin Solhdju is a Senior Researcher at the Fonds national de la recherche scientifique (FNRS) and a professor at the Institute for Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Mons in Belgium. She is a member of the Groupe d’études constructivistes (GeCo) at Université Libre de Bruxelles\, as well as a co-founder of the collective Dingdingdong. Institute for the co-production of knowledge on Huntington’s Disease. She is the author of two monographs: Testing Knowledge. Toward an Ecology of Diagnosis (2021) and Selbstexperimente. Die Suche nach der Innenperspektive und ihre epistemologischen Folgen (2011). \n\n\nThis event is co-sponsored by Concordia’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture (CISSC)\, the Media History Research Centre\, the Milieux Institute for Arts\, Culture\, and Technology\, and McGill University’s Department of Social Studies of Medicine. \n  \n\n: October 3\, 2024 \n: Speculative Life Cluster Research EV 10.625 \n For inquires\, please contact: jeremy.stolow@concordia.ca
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/alternative-medicine-and-infernal-alternatives-on-the-modern-fear-of-being-duped/
LOCATION:Speculative Life Research Cluster  EV 10.625
CATEGORIES:Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://milieux.concordia.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1723567489084.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241009T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241012T190000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20241003T183217Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241003T183615Z
UID:8637-1728478800-1728759600@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:Sensorium Colaboratory: A series of transdisciplinary workshops
DESCRIPTION:Milieux in collaboration with the Applied AI Institute and the Center for Sensory Studies\, presents The Sensorium Collaboratory—a series of workshops designed to foster transdisciplinary collaboration and critical experimentation with AI and neurotechnologies. \nFrom creative coding with Python and Arduino boards to experimenting with biofeedback interfaces and AI-generated art\, these workshops offer a hands-on opportunity to explore cutting-edge technologies in a creative context. Students\, faculty\, and researchers are all welcome to join in co-creating and reimagining the future throughout this four-day event. On the final day\, participants will showcase their work during the Open Doors event on October 12th\, where you can share your experiences and interactive installations with family and friends. \n  \n📅 October 9th to 12th | EV Building\, 10th Floor \nGeek Workshop:Python\, Ableton\, Touchdesigner :\n October 9th\, 1-5 pm | SpecLife Room (EV 10.625)\n\nPerformance Workshop : Laboratory theatre\n October 10th\, 1-5 pm | Video Production Studio(EV 10.760)\n\nCo-design studio : Setup interactive installations\n October 11th\, 1-5 pm | Video Production Studio (EV 10.760)\n\nOpen-door event : Have fun with family and friends\nOctober 12th\, 3-7 pm | Video Production Studio (EV 10.760)\n❓ For more information and to register: https://forms.gle/xoWUW1uW74DbPTkc6  \n📩  Contact: meteomythosophy@gmail.com \n 
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/sensorium-colaboratory-a-series-of-transdisciplinary-workshops/
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://milieux.concordia.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Sensorium_poster-e1727980563507.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241011T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241011T160000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20241003T170112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241003T170747Z
UID:8622-1728653400-1728662400@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:Textiles & Materiality Workshop: Merit of Making
DESCRIPTION:Are you curious about adding textile embroidery to your research practice? Join the Textiles & Materiality research cluster for the Merit of Making Workshop. Led by Gen Moisan\, this workshop will give you the opportunity to create your own unique embroidered patches while exploring its rich history and cultural significance. \n  \nABOUT THE WORKSHOP:  \nYou will learn to produce an embroidered patch on the Tajima Embroidery Machine\, including how to integrate different textures and embroidery stitches within your design. \nEmbroidered patches have a long and rich history cross-culturally\, functioning as symbols of status\, achievement\, and identity within communities. In this workshop\, we invite you to consider what skills and statuses are undervalued within contemporary society. How can a merit badge bring attention to invisible\, unseen\, or otherwise unappreciated forms of knowledge? \nParticipants will learn design techniques and software basics\, required to embroider different shapes\, textures\, and images\, in order to make their own merit badges using the digital thread placement machine at the Textiles and Materiality Cluster. The workshop will be 2 hours long\, with additional time reserved for participants to produce their designs. \n  \n: October 11\, 2024 | 1:30 – 4 PM \n: EV 10.725 \n Registration is Required! Please send an e-mail to textiles.materiality@concordia.ca to register for the workshop. Registration on a first-come\, first-served basis
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/8622/
LOCATION:Tajima Room EV 10.725
CATEGORIES:Workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241016T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241016T190000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20241008T210135Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T183058Z
UID:8655-1729098000-1729105200@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:Social & Networking Event with Milieux and MTL connect!
DESCRIPTION:Milieux is excited to invite you to a social and networking event on October 16\, from 5 to 7 PM\, in collaboration with <MTL> connect. We’re thrilled to welcome a distinguished cohort of international curators\, providing a unique opportunity for our members to reconnect after the summer. \nThis event is not just about networking! Participants will discover the incredible work of Milieux members! Ten talented students will be showcasing their projects in the atrium on the 11th floor\, offering a glimpse into the creativity and innovation within the different research clusters. \n  \nMEET OUR GUESTS: \n\nPat Badani: Independent cultural researcher and producer; former professor of integrated media at Illinois State University.\nLinda Law: Executive Director of the Center for the Holographic Arts.\nLaura Latour: Director of the KIKK Festival.\nGéraldine Bueken: Founder and Director of the XR4heritage program and 3 Plumes.\nKlio Krajewska: Independent curator based in Paris\, collaborator with the WRO Media Art Biennale and leader of ISEA2023 in Paris.\nNils Aziosmanoff: Director of Cube Garges.\nAnna Frants: Director of the Cyland Festival.\nSoh Yeong Roh: Director of the Nabi Center.\nJoon Lee: Director of the Institute for Culture and Art at Seoul National University.\nAnna Shvets: Researcher in generative AI\, PhD in computational musicology\, and composer.\nPascale Cosse: Cultural Attaché for Cinema\, Digital Arts\, and Interactive Creation at the General Delegation of Quebec in Paris.\n\n  \nMEET OUR PRESENTERS: \n\nDestiny Chescappio: Indigenous Futures\, RezPunk\nDorsa Armand: LePARC\, Shadow-synth\nFrançois Lespinasse: Speculative Life\, Mechanical Meanderings\nHei Lam Ng: Textiles & Materiality\, alt text:”Ballade pour Adeline”\nHuman Circle (Pramila Choudhary & Sabina Rak): Textiles & Materiality\, Winter\nIñigo Lasheras: Post Image\, Can’t See the Sunshine Behind\nKamyar Karimi: TAG\, Deconstructed Selfies: Regenerated\nMaxime Perreault: Indigenous Futures\, Glitch Armor\nMyriam A. Rafla: LePARC\, Quilting the Memoir: Stories of Exile (Quilt #1: Mother\, Mother)\nPoki Chan: Indigenous Futures\, Kowloon Walled City Reforge Project\n\nLight refreshments will be provided. Feel free to spread the word within the Milieux community\, we are excited to see you all! \n  \n📅: October 16\, 2024 | 5-7 PM \n📍Milieux Institute\, Atrium 11th Floor \n🎟️ Spots are limited\, please register here \n📖 Digital catalogue of the participants available here \n📸 Photo credits: Ana Isabel Duque \n 
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/social-networking-event-with-milieux-and-connect/
LOCATION:Milieux Institute Atrium (11th Floor)
CATEGORIES:Reception,Tour - Visit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://milieux.concordia.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Networking-event-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241021T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241021T160000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20241003T174351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241003T174351Z
UID:8632-1729515600-1729526400@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:Textiles & Materiality Workshop: Merit of Making
DESCRIPTION:Are you curious about adding textile embroidery to your research practice? Join the Textiles & Materiality research cluster for the Merit of Making Workshop. Led by Gen Moisan\, this workshop will give you the opportunity to create your own unique embroidered patches while exploring its rich history and cultural significance. \n  \nABOUT THE WORKSHOP:  \nYou will learn to produce an embroidered patch on the Tajima Embroidery Machine\, including how to integrate different textures and embroidery stitches within your design. \nEmbroidered patches have a long and rich history cross-culturally\, functioning as symbols of status\, achievement\, and identity within communities. In this workshop\, we invite you to consider what skills and statuses are undervalued within contemporary society. How can a merit badge bring attention to invisible\, unseen\, or otherwise unappreciated forms of knowledge? \nParticipants will learn design techniques and software basics\, required to embroider different shapes\, textures\, and images\, in order to make their own merit badges using the digital thread placement machine at the Textiles and Materiality Cluster. The workshop will be 2 hours long\, with additional time reserved for participants to produce their designs. \n  \n: October 21\, 2024 | 1-4 PM \n: Tajima Room EV 10.725 \n Registration is Required! Please send an e-mail to textiles.materiality@concordia.ca to register for the workshop. Registration on a first-come\, first-served basis
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/textiles-materiality-workshop-merit-of-making/
LOCATION:Tajima Room EV 10.725
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://milieux.concordia.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/tm_embroworkshop.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241024T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241024T160000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20241003T163702Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241003T163702Z
UID:8619-1729782000-1729785600@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:Engagement and Emotions in Game Data Work
DESCRIPTION:On October 24th\, join TAG for a talk about the emotional landscape of data-driven decision-making in game development with guest speaker Olli Sotamaa. \n  \nABOUT THE EVENT: \nApplication of data analytics and other data-driven working methods creates new processes and work cultures in game studios. While data analytics tools are often promised to support rational\, calm and emotion-free decision-making and to reduce developers’ reliance on intuition\, hunch and gut feeling\, recent empirical data indicates that working with game data provokes a large spectrum of emotions. The presentation introduces the idea of ‘game data work’\, explores its affective side\, and discusses how it potentially changes our overall understanding of game production. \n  \nABOUT THE SPEAKER: \n Olli Sotamaa is a professor of Game Culture Studies and leads the Tampere University Game Research Lab with professor Frans Mäyrä. He also serves as team leader in The Centre of Excellence in Game Culture Studies.  He has studied various game cultural phenomena related to online communities\, fandom and game modding\, and has also critically examined the game industry and different forms and contexts of game production. \n \n  \n: October 24\, 2024 | 3-4 PM \n: TAG Lab EV 11.435
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/engagement-and-emotions-in-game-data-work/
LOCATION:TAG Lab (EV 11.435)
CATEGORIES:Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://milieux.concordia.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/sotamaa-olli-121022-jr-01.jpg-e1727973098886.webp
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241025T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241025T143000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20240925T191434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T193203Z
UID:8603-1729861200-1729866600@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:Working with Friendship Round Table
DESCRIPTION:Join us on October 25th for Working with friendship\, a round table discussion about ceramics and the power of artistic collaboration. This event takes place as part of the 5th Virginia McClure Ceramic Biennale and the Ceramic Friends exhibition (October 25 – November 30). This discussion will bring together 5 artist duos to discuss their experiences and methods working collaboratively\, particularly through the medium of clay. \nParticipating artists :  \n\nEmii Alrai / Eve Tagny\nMarie-Michelle Deschamps / Celia Perrin Sidarous\nHeather Goodchild / Margaux Smith\nAugust Klintberg / Benny Nemer\nMeredith Carruthers / Susannah Wesley\n\nCeramics Friends highlights community building\, friendship and creative interrelation through clay. This edition of the biennale expands the notion of ceramics beyond produced objects to present the works of five artist duos who work in friendship\, engaging with clay as a shared conceptual material to bring forward communal aspects of ceramics work within a studio setting\, and the care\, resilience\, and collaboration this generates. The McClure Gallery thanks the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec and the Canada Council for their support of this project. \nABOUT THE ARTISTS: \nEmii Alrai (Leeds\, UK) and Eve Tagny (Montreal) worked collaboratively for two years developing the concept\, conversation and framework for Sutures (2022). Alrai is an artist and trained museum registrar whose practice subverts the traditional visual language of museum displays. Tagny’s multidisciplinary practice explores spiritual and embodied expressions of grief and resiliency in correlation with nature’s rhythms and materiality. \nMeredith Carruthers (Montreal) and Susannah Wesley (Montreal) have worked together under the name ‘Leisure’ since 2004. Their research-based art project The Ceremony (2021) is inspired by a document entitled “The Ceremony\,” found in the personal papers of local ceramicist Wanda Rozynska Staniszewka (1929-2007)\, which describes a series of objects\, costumes\, gestures and forms intended as “symbols for the renewal and healing of friends\,” between herself\, her husband Stanley Rozynski\, and her friend Gail Lamarche. This project was developed as part of the Foreman Art Gallery’s ArtLab residency and further supported by the Rozynski Art Centre\, the artist’s former home and studio. \nMarie-Michelle Deschamps (Montreal) and Celia Perrin Sidarous (Montreal) began working together in 2020 when they shared a studio. Marie-Michelle Deschamps’ practice focuses on language as an inhabitable space where aesthetic forms reside. Celia Perrin Sidarous is an image-based artist indebted to sStill lLife\, whose artworks present assemblages following an internal and associative logic. Both artists have featured in numerous solo and collective exhibitions in Canada and abroad. \nHeather Goodchild (Toronto) and Margaux Smith (Toronto) have been collaborating informally for two years. Goodchild is a multidisciplinary artist exhibiting internationally and throughout Canada since 2001. Recurring themes in her work include symbolism\, rituals\, personal development\, and the collapse of the hierarchy of artistic disciplines. Smith uses layers of paint\, drawing\, and collage to convey the body’s state of constant transformation. She is represented by Clint Roenisch Gallery\, Toronto. \nAugust Klintberg (Calgary) and Benny Nemer‘s (Paris\, FR) collaborative work articulates itself through participatory gestures involving acts of hospitality\, floral gift giving\, and paper wrapping\, alongside artistic research into the œuvre and legacy of Montreal potter Rosalie Namer (1925-2006). Their projects have been presented in galleries\, flower shops\, and community gardens in Canada\, the United States\, Germany\, and Scotland. \nLeisure is a conceptual collaborative art practice between Montreal-based artists Meredith Carruthers and Susannah Wesley. Working together under the name “Leisure” since 2004\, they engage with cultural historical narratives through research\, conversation\, published texts\, curatorial projects and art production.   \nThe Milieux Institute is a leading graduate research center for arts\, culture and technology.  Established in 2016\, it houses several research clusters across various disciplines\, and serves as a platform for creative experimentation and collaboration. \n  \n📅: October 25\, 2024 | 1-2:30 p.m \n📍EV 10.625
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/working-with-friendship-round-table/
LOCATION:Speculative Life Research Cluster  EV 10.625
CATEGORIES:Roundtable
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241025T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241025T150000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20241003T153549Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T193036Z
UID:8611-1729868400-1729868400@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:#Gamergate\, Extremism\, and Disinformation in Games
DESCRIPTION:Join us at TAG Lab on October 25th for a Panel discussion with David Wollinsky\, Rachel Kowert and Mia Consalvo. \nPrompted by David Wolinsky’s new book The Hivemind Swarmed: Conversations on Gamergate\, the Aftermath\, and the Quest for a Safer Internet\, this panel discusses developments\, disasters\, and stagnations within games culture in the ten years since #Gamergate began. David Wolinsky is joined by psychologist Dr. Rachel Kowert and game studies scholar Dr. Mia Consalvo\, who will share their recent work on extremism and disinformation within gaming spaces to discuss how various spheres of games culture have (or have not) developed over the last decade\, and how we continue to deal with the aftermath of #Gamergate.   \n  \nABOUT THE SPEAKERS: \nDavid Wolinsky is a Chicago-based oral historian and documentary researcher. Since 2014\, he’s been unraveling complex questions about online culture wars\, fandom\, and entertainment labor issues through his independent interview series\, Don’t Die. Using videogames as a Trojan horse\, the series examines how these conflicts resonate across industries like TV\, film\, VFX\, architecture criticism\, and even supply-chain activism. His work reveals the broader societal impact of these digital tensions and offers a living archive of over 500 interviews on the evolving relationship between technology and society. \n  \nThis archive\, preserved by Stanford\, has informed exhibits at Seattle’s Museum of Pop Culture\, case studies by Cornell Worker Institute\, and reporting by the Wall Street Journal. His interviews also led to his first book\, The Hivemind Swarmed: Conversations on Gamergate\, The Aftermath\, and the Quest for a Safer Internet (Beacon\, August 2024). \n  \nIn addition to collaborations with the University of Washington’s Information School\, Carnegie Mellon’s Human-Computer Interaction Institute\, and Northeastern University\, David’s earlier journalism career includes award-winning work for The Onion A.V. Club and NBC\, as well as receiving the New York Videogame Critics Circle’s journalism award in 2017. His interviews continue to bridge industries\, creating a comprehensive resource to understand early 21st-century digital life. \n  \nRachel Kowert\, Ph.D is a research psychologist\, award winning author\, and globally recognized leader facilitating global policy and product development with non-profit\, governmental\, and non-governmental agencies for more than 15 years through data-driven research focused on mental health and trust and safety in digital games. She has spoken about her work to thousands of people across the globe\, including the United Nations and the United States Congress. She has published a variety of books and scientific articles relating to the psychology of games and\, more recently\, the relationship between games and mental health specifically. \nRachel is also the founder of Psychgeist®\, a multimedia content production studio for the science of games and pop culture. \n \nIn addition to holding a research chair at Concordia University in Digital Game Studies and Design\, Mia Consalvo is a Professor in the Department of Communication Studies\, and is the current director for the Technoculture\, Art & Games Research Centre (TAG). She is the author of several key game studies texts\, including Atari to Zelda and Cheating.  \n \n  \n  \n: October 25\, 2024 | 3 PM \n: TAG Lab EV 10.625 \n🔗 Register here
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/gamergate-extremism-and-disinformation-in-games/
LOCATION:Speculative Life Research Cluster  EV 10.625
CATEGORIES:Roundtable
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://milieux.concordia.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Untitled-2-4.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241030T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241030T193000
DTSTAMP:20260514T055853
CREATED:20241008T192153Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241024T173305Z
UID:8657-1730309400-1730316600@milieux.concordia.ca
SUMMARY:[TAG Critical Watch Series] The Super Mario Bros. Movie
DESCRIPTION:Join TAG on October 30th for TAG’s new Critical Watch Series! The first edition of the screening will feature The Super Mario Bros. Movie. \nThe TAG Critical Watch Series offers an opportunity to reflect on how video games are adapted and represented across film. The film screening will be followed by a short discussion and a podcast recording with select members of the audience. \nIf you would like to reserve a spot on the podcast for this month’s film ahead of time\, or if you would like to suggest films for future screenings\, please contact Marc Lajeunesse at tag.coordinator@concordia.ca \n  \n \n  \n📅 October 30\, 2024 | 5:30-7:30 pm \n📍Screening Room EV. 10.525 \n📽️ The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023) \n🎟️ Seating is limited! Make sure you book your spot here! \n  \n 
URL:https://milieux.concordia.ca/event/tag-critical-watch-series-the-super-mario-bros-movie/
LOCATION:Screening Room EV 10.525
CATEGORIES:Conversation,Screening
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